Tag: francis-ford-coppola

  • Dan Fogler Talks ‘The Offer’

    Dan Fogler as Francis Ford Coppola of the Paramount+ original series 'The Offer.'
    Dan Fogler as Francis Ford Coppola of the Paramount+ original series ‘The Offer.’ Photo: Nicole Wilder/Paramount+. ©2022 Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    Currently airing on Paramount+ is the new miniseries about the making of ‘The Godfather’ entitled ‘The Offer.’ The series chronicles producer Albert S. Ruddy’s journey to turn author Mario Puzo’s famous novel into a movie.

    The series stars Miles Teller as Ruddy, Juno Temple as Ruddy’s assistant Bettye McCartt, Matthew Goode as head of Paramount Pictures Robert Evans, Burn Gorman as Gulf and Western Industries’ Charles Bluhdorn, Colin Hanks as Bluhdorn’s right-hand man Barry Lapidus, Giovanni Ribisi as mob boss Joe Colombo, and Dan Fogler as filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola.

    Actor Dan Fogler began his career making popular comedies and animated films like ‘Balls of Fury,’ ‘Fanboys,’ ‘Take Me Home Tonight,’ ‘Horton Hears a Who!,’ ‘Kung Fu Panda,’ ‘Mars Needs Moms,’ and ‘Free Birds.’

    But he is probably best known for playing Jacob Kowalski in the ‘Harry Potter’ spinoffs ‘Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them,’ ‘Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald,’ and ‘Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore.’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Dan Fogler about playing Francis Ford Coppola in ‘The Offer.’

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    You can read our full interview with Dan Fogler below or click on the video player above to watch out interviews with Fogler, and Giovanni Ribisi about ‘The Offer.’

    Moviefone: To begin with, were you aware of all the legendary behind-the-scenes stories of the making of ‘The Godfather’ before you started making this miniseries?

    Dan Fogler: Yes, we just had one recently on the series that was a legend that came out, which was the famous dinner scene. I remember talking about that in college when I went to acting school because it was such a great tool. Coppola talks about getting all the actors together for dinner, sharing central activities, drinking together, and partying together because that builds the relationships and it makes excellent chemistry.

    So, there was this famous dinner that we recreated in the show, where they brought in the cast. It was the day before shooting and Coppola rented out this room in this restaurant and they brought Marlon Brando, James Caan, and Al Pacino. Everyone was there, even Diane Keaton. Everyone started vying for Brando’s attention and everyone kind of sat where you’d think that they would sit as a family hierarchy.

    Then all the things that happened in that scene played out, where there’s an insult and Caan gets upset, and it gets heated. Then Brando says, “Did this man hurt you?” to Talia Shire. Suddenly, it was in that moment that Coppola saw, “Oh my God, this is going to work. Everyone’s falling into place perfectly, the chemistry’s working and they’re already in character.” So, it was one of those magical theatrical moments. So yeah, those are legends. Coming up as a young actor, you hear about all these things and then suddenly you’re on set and you’re recreating them and it’s very surreal.

    MF: What was your approach to playing Francis Ford Coppola?

    DF: So, I’ve been kind of studying Coppola for a while. I saw ‘The Godfather’ when I was in high school as a young actor, and then used that as a mothership of the whole ensemble, just like reverse engineering. I was seeing everything from Coppola, including ‘The Godfather,’ then I went to ‘Apocalypse Now,’ and ‘Hearts of Darkness.’

    Just seeing Coppola, the ringmaster at the center of that circus and the kind of person that it takes. The fortitude that it takes to create something like that, the passion, and the energy. So, I was very familiar with him. I understood as a young actor, he was 30 when he did ‘The Godfather.’ There was a real “Orson Welles syndrome” going on with him, where he’s the smartest guy in the room, but he still is got to prove himself.

    He won an Academy Award for writing ‘Patton,’ which is just military poetry, but he still had to prove himself as a director. They don’t make a lot of people like that anymore. These real artists, he’s like a real visionary. What I understood about seeing him at the center of that, that he has to put himself in the middle of chaos in order to create his best work. He has to be in the middle of a pressure cooker in order to create, to be at his best.

    I understood as a young actor, really trying to prove yourself, being put in a situation where you’re pigeonholed and who would ever cast me is Coppola? I would think John Belushi first, and I would think all of these different people first. I knew I would have to prove myself in order to be the room to audition for Coppola.

    But there was something that happened after the audition where I saw myself and I kind of saw what they were hoping to see, like the potential there, which is that I look like him. I look like I could be related to him if I put the glasses on. I got a beard, I put my hair to side, and I really do look like him. So, there was a confidence there where I thought, I got a shot here. So, Coppola has been in my life a long time.

    Matthew Goode as Robert Evans in 'The Offer,' streaming on Paramount+, 2022. Photo: Miller Mobley/Paramount+
    Matthew Goode as Robert Evans in ‘The Offer,’ streaming on Paramount+, 2022. Photo: Miller Mobley/Paramount+

    MF: At this year’s Oscar ceremony, Coppola for the first time ever publicly recognized Robert Evans contributions to ‘The Godfather.’ Can you talk about their relationship in the series and what it was like for you to work with Matthew Goode?

    DF: If Matthew is not nominated (for an Emmy), then there’s something wrong with the world. I had a front row seat. There’s something that happened to me playing Coppola, which was, I’m playing a director. I had such a love of the ensemble of all their performances. I was just sitting there impressed. I just couldn’t help but root them on and be a coach for them. Anytime someone was like, “I feel nervous or whatever.” I was like, no. You are amazing. I was there for them for the support. Especially Matthew, because he’s a Brit. What he’s doing is he’s just sinking into that, disappearing into that, and becoming Bob Evans. I think that he’s amazing.

    On the show, I’m playing a great admiration for the Evans because he’s giving us a chance here. He’s just a huge coach for everybody, but in a real life, that contention really spiraled out of control. There’re so many egos and there’s telegrams that I found, between Evans and Coppola when they were starting to do ‘The Godfather Part II.’ They’re just scathing, and a lot of feelings were hurt.

    Here’s the thing. Coppola had this vision and he saw only one person as the Don, and he wanted Brando. He thought that was a long shot. Then when he got Brando, it was just like, “Okay, well then I want Pacino, that’s my only choice.” So, he became like, “It’s my vision, let me see my vision to the end. There’s something here.”

    He butts heads with Evans at every point on the road. So, I guess they did butt heads a bit about that. That’s in the show, and those scenes are a lot of fun, but I think my favorite stuff to play is when they’re working together, getting along, and Evans walks in and is just like a knight in shining armor. He just saves the day. There’re a couple moments like that. Those are my favorite moments, the celebratory moments where we’re all winning, and the musketeers are working together.

    MF: Finally, have you ever had a chance to meet Francis Ford Coppola?

    DF: No, but I’ve met people in his family. I worked with Robert Schwartzman. I did ‘The Argument,’ with him. He’s his nephew. I’ve met and spoken to, in my research, people that want to be off the record, who are very close to him. I got to speak to James Caan, which is as close to him but not in the family as you can get. I hope one day to talk to him and I hope that he sees it. That would be the ultimate badge of honor to get his stamp of approval.

    Miles Teller as Al Ruddy and Dan Fogler as Francis Ford Coppola
    Miles Teller as Al Ruddy and Dan Fogler as Francis Ford Coppola of the Paramount+ original series ‘The Offer.’ Photo: Nicole Wilder/Paramount+ ©2022 Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
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    You can watch an exclusive scene from the finale of Paramount+’s ‘The Offer,’ featuring the premiere of ‘The Godfather,’ by clicking on the video player above.

  • Adam Driver, Nathalie Emmanuel and Forest Whittaker Head for ‘Megalopolis’

    Adam Driver in 'The Report'
    Adam Driver in ‘The Report’ by Scott Z. Burns. Photo by Atsushi Nishijima.

    Francis Ford Coppola is a filmmaker whose career includes such stone-cold classics as the first two ‘Godfather’ movies, ‘Apocalypse Now’ and ‘The Conversation’.

    He’s evolved from young and hungry guerilla director to one of the grand elders of cinema, helping others get their work made and investing what he’s earned in other business, including his famous winery. So, you might think his legacy would be secure.

    Yet for Coppola, he’s not yet satisfied, his creative drive powering him to work on one more, giant – and incredibly risky – passion project, a movie he’s been trying to bring to life for 20 years: ‘Megalopolis’. And now he might, finally, be doing it, as Adam Driver, Nathalie Emmanuel, Forest Whittaker, Jon Voight, and Laurence Fishburne are all in the cast for the movie.

    Strict story details are sketchy, but the rough logline runs thus: The fate of Rome haunts a modern world unable to solve its own social problems in this epic story of political ambition, genius, and conflicting interests. To be a little clearer on that, it’ll focus on political and social wrangling in a giant city (modeled on, or even actually, New York) looking to rebuild after a disaster.

    The quest to make this one has consumed Coppola in recent years, and he’s pouring a lot of his own money into making the movie (while deals are being hatched to boost its financing). With a budget in the region of $100 million. It’s a project that has seen cast and backers come and go – most recently, he had it set up with the likes of Oscar Isaac and Zendaya in the lead roles, but that version didn’t quite come together (though Voight and Whittaker were attached then, too).

    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of 'The Godfather' event and historic street naming ceremony the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.
    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of ‘The Godfather’ event and historic street naming ceremony the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.

    Speaking to Deadline recently, Coppola outlined why he’s really making this movie. What would make me really happy? It’s not winning a lot of Oscars because I already have a lot and maybe more than I deserve. And it’s not that I make a lot of money, although I think over time it will make a lot of money because anything that the people keep looking at and finding new things, that makes money,” he says.

    Coppola adds: “So somewhere down the line, way after I’m gone, all I want is for them to discuss ‘Megalopolis’ and, is the society we’re living in the only one available to us? How can we make it better? Education, mental health? What the movie really is proposing is that utopia is not a place. It’s how can we make everything better? Every year, come up with two, three or four ideas that make it better. I would be smiling in my grave if I thought something like that happened, because people talk about what movies really mean if you give them something.”

    The cameras should be rolling this fall. But is Coppola not concerned that it could still be a tough sell, even when it’s been made? “My films, the more weird they are, the longer they seem to last,” he says. “I don’t even know why.”

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  • TV Review: ‘The Offer’

    Pictured: Miles Teller as Al Ruddy and Dan Fogler as Francis Ford Coppola of the Paramount+ original series THE OFFER. Photo Cr: Nicole Wilder/Paramount+ ©2022 Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Miles Teller as Al Ruddy and Dan Fogler as Francis Ford Coppola of the Paramount+ original series ‘The Offer.’ Photo: Nicole Wilder/Paramount+. ©2022 Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    Premiering April 28th on Paramount+ is the new 10-part mini-series ‘The Offer,’ which chronicles the making of ‘The Godfather.’

    The series stars Miles Teller as ‘Godfather’ producer Albert S. Ruddy, Matthew Goode as Paramount executive Robert Evans, Giovanni Ribisi as mobster Joe Colombo, and Dan Fogler as director Francis Ford Coppola.

    The result is a really fun retelling of how ‘The Godfather’ was made, even if most of the facts have been replaced with legend, and serves an entertaining send-up of Hollywood filmmaking with an absolutely brilliant performance by Matthew Goode as the iconic Robert Evans.

    The series begins by introducing us to Albert S. Ruddy (Teller), a computer programmer-turned TV writer who wants to produce feature films. He soon meets the head of Paramount studios, Robert Evans (Goode), who desperately needs a hit, and assigns Ruddy to produce Mario Puzo’s (Patrick Gallo) best-selling novel, “The Godfather.”

    Dan Fogler as Francis Ford Coppola of the Paramount+ original series 'The Offer.'
    Dan Fogler as Francis Ford Coppola of the Paramount+ original series ‘The Offer.’ Photo: Nicole Wilder/Paramount+. ©2022 Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    Evan’s righthand-man, Peter Bart (Josh Zukerman) recommends writer Francis Ford Coppola (Fogler) to direct the film and co-write with Puzo. But production of the movie is put in jeopardy when mob boss Joe Colombo (Ribisi) decides to stop the production because he feels the book is negative towards Italian-Americans. Along with his assistant Bettye McCartt (Juno Temple), Ruddy begins a friendship with Colombo that allows the movie to get made.

    Meanwhile, Evans battles Paramount owners Charles Bluhdorn (Burn Gorman) and Barry Lapidus (Colin Hanks) to get the movie made and keep his job. As the film goes into production, Ruddy must deal with Colombo and the mob, fighting Bluhdorn and Evans to get actors Al Pacino (Anthony Ippolito) and Marlon Brando (Justin Chambers) cast, and fulfilling Coppola’s vision to make the greatest movie of all-time!

    The pilot episode is directed by Dexter Fletcher, who is also a producer on the series and has a flair for telling “based on a true story” movies like ‘Bohemian Rhapsody,’ which he unofficially directed, and ‘Rocketman.’ But the biggest problem with the series, much like HBO’s ‘Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty,’ is that it offers legend as fact and mixes the two together, ultimately leaving the audience lost as to what is real and what is a dramatization.

    Also blending myth and facts, actor Gianni Russo, who played Carlo in ‘The Godfather,’ has been very vocal over the years about his version of the making of the film, which again, may or may not have been true, and saw him taking on the role of mediator between the studio and the mafia.

    The series contradicts that story, having Ruddy as the mediator, and also depicts Russo as physically abusive and a sexual predator on the set. Again, that may or may not be true, but if it is, the series does finally explain why actor James Caan really beat Russo up in their famous fight scene.

    Another aspect of the series that may or may not ultimately work, is the way they orchestrated moments from ‘The Godfather’ to happen behind the scenes, as if to say that those “real life” moments inspired the film. This works once in a while, but the series doubles down and does it constantly. For example, on the set of the movie in the Don’s office, Ruddy sits behind the desk answering questions from the crew as if he was the Don. While fun at times, this technique eventually runs out of steam.

    Giovanni Ribisi as Joe Colombo
    Giovanni Ribisi as Joe Colombo of the Paramount+ original series ‘The Offer.’ Photo: Nicole Wilder/Paramount+. ©2022 Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    The sub-plot between Ruddy and the mob is at times more entertaining than the story of making the movie, but I have to call into question if any of that actually happened. According to the mini-series, Ruddy and Colombo become very close, and Ruddy is even in attendance when Colombo was assassinated, which may or may not be true.

    The series also implies that Lenny Montana (wonderfully played by Lou Ferrigno), the actor who portrayed Luca Brasi, actually worked for Colombo and may have been implicated in the murder of “Crazy” Joe Gallo. With so many true stories told in the series, it becomes confusing when the show takes “creative license.”

    Miles Teller gives a strong performance as Albert S. Ruddy and is really the audience’s eyes throughout the series. Juno Temple is also quite strong as his assistant Bettye and transcends her limited role. Some of the supporting roles of famous actors are a bit hard to swallow, including Anthony Ippolito’s caricature-type performance as Al Pacino. But, Justin Chambers perfectly captures both Marlon Brando’s oddness and genius.

    Giovanni Ribisi is surprisingly great as Joe Colombo and brings a lot of humanity to an otherwise unredeemable character. Burn Gorman also gives a spot-on performance as Gulf + Western owner Charles Bluhdorn, which is both funny and at times menacing.

    Matthew Goode as Robert Evans in 'The Offer,' streaming on Paramount+, 2022. Photo: Miller Mobley/Paramount+
    Matthew Goode as Robert Evans in ‘The Offer,’ streaming on Paramount+. Photo: Miller Mobley/Paramount+.

    But for me, its Matthew Goode’s performance as legendary producer Robert Evans that really makes this series worth watching. For those that don’t know, Evans is one of the most iconic Hollywood producers of all-time, overseeing not just ‘The Godfather,’ but also hits like ‘Love Story,’ and ‘Chinatown.’ Evans had a very specific way of talking and moving, and Goode nails each aspect of his personality perfectly.

    While a supporting character, Evans is as much the star of ‘The Offer’ as Ruddy, and the series tracks his rise, fall, and rise again at Paramount and hints at his drug addiction and failed marriage to Ali MacGraw.

    In the end, fans of classic Hollywood filmmaking and specifically ‘The Godfather’ will enjoy this series, whether some of the facts are in question or not. But I do think that anyone with a passing knowledge of ‘The Godfather’ and the legendary stories from behind the scenes will have a more enjoyable viewing than those that do not know the movie’s history.

    ‘The Offer’ receives 4 out of 5 stars.

    'The Offer' premieres April 28th on Paramount+
    ‘The Offer’ premieres April 28th on Paramount+
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    You can watch an exclusive scene from the finale of Paramount+’s ‘The Offer,’ featuring the premiere of ‘The Godfather,’ by clicking on the video player above.

  • Andy Garcia Talks ‘Big Gold Brick’

    Andy Garcia in 'Big Gold Brick.'
    Andy Garcia in ‘Big Gold Brick.’

    Opening in theaters, on digital, and On Demand beginning February 25th is the new movie ‘Big Gold Brick,’ which marks writer and director Brian Petsos’ feature film debut.

    The movie stars Academy Award nominee Andy Garcia (‘The Godfather Part III’) as the eccentric Floyd Deveraux, who is involved in a car accident with fledgling writer Samuel Liston (Emory Cohen). Floyd soon takes Samuel under his wing as his biographer, and introduces him to his wife and children, before his deepest secrets are revealed.

    In addition to Garcia and Cohen, the cast also includes Megan Fox (‘Jonah Hex’), Lucy Hale (‘Borrego’), and Oscar Isaac (‘Dune’).

    Acting legend Andy Garcia has been making movies for almost forty years! He’s appeared in such classic films as ‘The Untouchables,’ ‘Black Rain,’ ‘Internal Affairs,’ ‘When a Man Loves a Woman,’ ‘Things to Do in Denver When You’re Dead,’ ‘Night Falls on Manhattan,’ and ‘Smokin’ Aces.’

    He was nominated for Best Supporting Actor at the Academy Awards for playing Vincent Mancini in Francis Ford Coppola’s ‘The Godfather Part III,’ but may be best known for his role as Terry Benedict in Steven Soderbergh‘s ‘Ocean’s Eleven,’ ‘Ocean’s Twelve,’ and ‘Ocean’s Thirteen.’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking to Andy Garcia about his work on ‘Big Gold Brick,’ as well as his thoughts on Frances Ford Coppola’s recently released director’s cut of ‘The Godfather Part III.’

    The iconic actor discussed his new film, his unusual character, working with Oscar Isaac, the difference between performing in a comedy or a drama, and his reaction to ‘Mario Puzo’s The Godfather, Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone.’

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    You can read the full transcript of our interview with Andy Garcia about ‘Big Gold Brick’ below, or watch our interviews with Garcia, Lucy Hale, Emory Cohen and writer/director Brian Petsos by clicking on the video player above.

    Moviefone: To begin with, how would you describe this movie to our audience?

    Andy Garcia: It’s a very unique movie and encompasses many different genres, twists and turns in a way that’s unique to Brian (Petsos), the writer and director. This is his absurdity and sense of humor. What I can tell you, is that I play a gentleman who has an encounter, an accident with someone on the street, and hits him with his car. That relationship happens because of that, what ensues after that, as I begin to try to take him to heal and I bring him home to my house to get him well, because I feel responsible.

    But that relationship quickly turns into other needs that I have, I would say. In that process, the relationship begins to formulate and take different turns. It’s very hard to explain the nature of what it is because immediately you’ll start anticipating things that, certainly, I don’t want you to anticipate.

    MF: I thought Floyd was a perfect role for you as an actor. Did you recognize that when you first read the screenplay, and what was your approach to playing this character?

    AG: Thank you. I mean, I’d recognize something because, obviously, I got all the way through the script and said, “What the hell did I just read?” I called Oscar Isaac, who had sent it to me, who was a producer on it and was going to play a part in it. He had worked with Brian Petsos on several shorts they did together.

    So, I was aware of their relationship and the shorts. I said, “Oscar, this is really a bizarre script, and I’m trying to figure out what it’s all about and who this guy is.” I think, we started talking and I said, “Is it this? Is it that?” He would say something like, “Oh, I don’t know. I don’t know how you see that, but maybe.” Then finally I said something like, “I think it’s like that.” He said, “Yeah, that’s it.” I went, “Oh, okay. I’ll do it.”

    Oscar Isaac in 'Big Gold Brick.'
    Oscar Isaac in ‘Big Gold Brick.’

    MF: You have a wonderful scene in the movie with Oscar Isaac, what was it like acting opposite him?

    AG: Well, we’ve worked together before. We did a movie a while back ago called, ‘For Greater Glory: The True Story of Cristiada.’ Listen, Oscar’s an actor I admire, tremendously. He’s A wonderful actor. We’ve only had wonderful times working together in the past. We had a desire to work together and to work together, yet again. So, whenever I’m with him, we have a good time, and it was a joy. His character is so inspired, and the juxtaposition of putting Floyd in this man’s world there and how Floyd deals with it, also gives insight into how comfortable Floyd is in the most unique and dangerous situations.

    MF: Can you talk about working with Emory Cohen on Floyd and Samuel’s unusual relationship?

    AG: Well, Emery was great. He came on the first scene we did, where already I could tell that he was locked into a very specific character that he was committed to, and a state of mind and a state of angst. Also, the physical choices with the hair and all that. My job is to support that idea and engage in that idea, and have Floyd have to deal with it. I said, “Okay, I got this guy I just hit with a car,” and then he brings him home and then he goes, “Oh, you’re a writer.” Then the movie begins. Anyway, it’s a movie that encompasses so many different genres.

    (L to R) Andy Garcia and Emory Cohen in 'Big Gold Brick.'
    (L to R) Andy Garcia and Emory Cohen in ‘Big Gold Brick.’

    MF: As an actor, is there a difference for you between doing comedy and drama?

    AG: Well, I mean, it’s an art form. The sense of comedy and understanding how it works, and the timing of it all, and the choices you can make, depending on the tone of the comedy, have many different styles. But they always have to, I feel, be rooted in a real sense of truth, which it makes it even more poignant when you laugh. So, with Brian, that came from Second City and an improv background. I studied with a lot of people earlier out in my career and did a lot of improvisational theater.

    So, we had a nice way of language, that if I would say, “Let me try something” and then I would just do it. Then, he would engage and laugh, and that’s part of the creative process, I think, it’s important, whether it’s a comedy or drama. Because you just want to take all the raw material you can to the cutting room and let the movie then tell you, even if the director goes, “I want it to be this.” The movie over here is going, “No, no, no, no. You got to go over here, because that’s the take you should use.” Then you go, “Yeah. Okay.”

    MF: Finally, I was curious if you’ve had an opportunity to see ‘Mario Puzo’s The Godfather, Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone,’ which is Frances Ford Coppola’s director’s cut of ‘The Godfather Part III’ that was recently released. What were your thoughts on his new version of the film?

    AG: I thought it was beautiful. I loved the movie the first time. I love it again the second time. I was aware of the sort of narrative structures and choices he made, to take out and restructure, which I thought was great. To me, that was a great privilege, obviously, to be a part of that world and to share that time with Francis.

    So, like I said, I really enjoyed it, but more importantly to me, if this is what Francis wants to do, and that’s what he perceives, he’s the man. So, I want him to be happy and content. You know what I mean? And finish the ideas that he originally wanted to do. That’s what’s most important thing as a filmmaker, to leave that legacy the way he wanted to leave it.

    Because he explained a lot, why the first version came out and sense of time and all that stuff. So, I think it’s great. There’s the 50th anniversary of ‘The Godfather’ happening this week at Paramount. They’re naming a street after Francis. Unfortunately, I’m leaving town and I’m going to miss it, but I’ll be there in spirit, for sure. He’s a very special man and a very special director.

    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of 'The Godfather' event and historic street naming ceremony the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.
    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of ‘The Godfather’ event and historic street naming ceremony at the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.
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  • First Trailer for Making of ‘The Godfather’ Series ‘The Offer’

    Giovanni Ribisi as Joe Colombo
    Giovanni Ribisi as Joe Colombo of the Paramount+ original series ‘The Offer.’ Photo: Nicole Wilder/Paramount+. ©2022 Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    Turning 50 years old in 2022, ‘The Godfather’ is widely acclaimed as one of the greatest movies ever made. But making it in the first place was far from an easy task.

    That’s the true story that will unfold in new limited series ‘The Offer’, which launches on Paramount+ this April. It’s inspired by, and partly based on, the book from producer Albert S. Ruddy (who is an executive producer on the series). It chronicles his struggle to get the 1972 movie off the ground and keep it in production in the face of clashing creatives, difficult actors, and unhappy mobsters.

    Paramount Pictures chose Ruddy to helm a project that the studio had little confidence could even succeed, especially since many considered the era of gangster movies to be long gone. Based on the novel of the same name by Mario Puzo, ‘The Godfather’ was originally conceived as a low-budget project, and Francis Ford Coppola only became involved after other filmmakers refused to direct it.

    While ‘The Godfather’ is known for launching the prolific career of Hollywood legends including Robert De Niro and Al Pacino, ‘The Offer’ will focus on lesser-known facts of the movie’s production. Ruddy dealt with an unwilling director and a screenwriter desperate for money at the start of the production, and the series shows how he negotiated with the studio to increase the budget and help craft the classic it became.

    How classic? ‘The Godfather’ was nominated for 11 Academy Awards, winning three, including Best Picture and Best Actor for Marlon Brando‘s performance as Vito Corleone (though he famously refused to accept it, instead using the event to protest the country’s treatment of Native Americans).

    Teller plays Ruddy, with Matthew Goode as Paramount head Robert Evans, Juno Temple as Ruddy’s secretary and right-hand woman Bettye McCartt and Giovanni Ribisi as real-life mobster Joe Columbo, who was determined to shut down production entirely.

    Dan Fogler is Coppola, while Burn Gorman plays industrialist Charles Bludhorn, who ran Paramount’s parent company at time, Gulf & Western. Colin Hanks is on as Barry Lapidus, a Gulf & Western executive with a lot of power over Paramount, while Patrick Gallo is ‘Godfather’ author Mario Puzo. Justin Chambers, meanwhile, plays Brando.

    ‘The Offer’ was created and written by ‘The Player’ and ‘Escape at Dannemora’s Michael Tolkin alongside executive producer Nikki Toscano, who also serves as showrunner. ‘Rocketman’ director Dexter Fletcher handled the first block of episodes.

    “What sealed it for me was when Al said, ‘Every day of making ‘The Godfather’ was the worst day in my life,’ and that told me we had a show” Tolkin told Entertainment Weekly last month. “For every character in the film, getting it made or stopping it from being made was at the core of their actions, and it was a matter of life and death to them.”

    The 10-episode limited series will drop its first three episodes Thursday, April 28th exclusively on the Paramount+ streaming service. Subsequent episodes will drop weekly on Thursdays.

    'The Offer' premieres April 28th on Paramount+
    Paramount+ original series ‘The Offer.’ Photo Cr: Sarah Coulter/Paramount+ (C) 2022 ViacomCBS. All Rights Reserved.
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  • Female Filmmakers in Focus: Gia Coppola on her new film ‘Mainstream’

    Female Filmmakers in Focus: Gia Coppola on her new film ‘Mainstream’

    Welcome to Female Filmmakers in Focus, where you will find a recommendation for films directed by women to seek out each week. This week features an interview with Gia Coppola about her new satire ‘Mainstream,’ plus a look back at ‘Zola’ director Janicza Bravo’s debut feature film ‘Lemon.’

    Mainstream (directed by Gia Coppola)

    Gia Coppola on the set of 'Mainstream'  (Photo courtesy IFC Films)
    Gia Coppola on the set of ‘Mainstream’ (Photo courtesy IFC Films)

    Granddaughter of Francis Ford Coppola and niece of Sofia Coppola, filmmaking is in Gia Coppola’s blood. She sharpened her cinematic skills making short films for fashion designers like Zac Posen, Diane Von Furstenberg, and Rodarte. She made her feature film debut adapting James Franco’s short story collection ‘Palo Alto.’ That film, starring Emma Roberts and Jack Kilmer, premiered at the 2013 Toronto Film Festival and was released in theaters in the spring of 2014. She continues to work in fashion photography, and has directed music videos in between feature film projects.

    Her latest film ‘Mainstream’ is a social media satire starring Andrew Garfield as a mysterious street performer-turned influencer and Maya Hawke as the creator of his wildly popular YouTube show. The film also features cameos from real-life influencers like Patrick Starr and Jake Paul. Fans of Francis Ford Coppola’s films will also get a hoot out of long-time collaborator Colleen Camp as the skeevy owner of a magic-themed bar. Shot in and around Hollywood Boulevard, Coppola aims to skewer the Hollywood machine, expose the tarnish under the veneer of social media stars, and asks us to question what our current culture deems valuable.
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    Moviefone spoke to Gia Coppola about her new film.

    Moviefone: What inspired you to tackle the YouTube show culture?
    Gia Coppola: I think for me, the internet is always evolving, so how do you make a movie about something that is rapidly changing? I felt like it’s more about the emotion of the story, it could be about any platform. It doesn’t really matter. Emotional scenarios have been part of our lives since cavemen, but it’s now extra amplified because it’s part of our everyday lives with the phone, and how do you find sanity and ground yourself in that environment?

    MF: How did you choose the Hollywood locations?
    GC: I have a special affection for Hollywood Boulevard. I was raised right above it. I still live right above it. I love to walk through it. It feels like such a metaphor for Hollywood and these sorts of dreams, and all these amazing characters, and our obsession with fame and why we find so much value in that. My uncle’s office is right on the boulevard, so I walk there from home. It’s sort of my hood, the strip there. The bar was a made up place, but I was inspired by The Magic Castle and the kooky bars that are on the strip.

    MF: Can you talk a bit about inspiration for Andrew Garfield’s gonzo Hollywood Boulevard street performer?
    GC: His character is exactly like these sorts of characters you see walking along Hollywood Boulevard. I’m so fascinated by them. What’s their story? Where did they come from? Why do they do what they’re doing?


    MF: ‘Network’ seems like a big influence. Were there any other inspirations for the structure of the film?

    GC: ‘Network’ was definitely a big inspiration for me. I had never seen it. I had seen ‘A Face In The Crowd,’ and I was blown away. When I got into this tone of satire and this commentary on the absurdity of our culture it led me down the path to ‘Network,’ which I think is a perfect movie. I could only kiss the toe of something that was made like that. I also like ‘Broadcast News.’

    MF: I love the parallels between Andrew Garfield’s character in this and Andy Griffith in ‘A Face In The Crowd’. Do you think that society has changed in the 70+ years since that film premiered?
    CG: I think as a collective we love to see a train wreck and the wheels to come off, and that’s when we actually pay attention and focus sometimes. I was playing with that idea. Do we embolden when that happens? Is it every man for himself or are we all in this together? I also wanted to play with the idea that what he is saying, there’s truth to it, but it’s also messy and conflicted and inappropriate. In the end, is what he says truthful to him or is it another attempt to get attention and likes?

    MF: Did you always have Maya Hawke in mind for Frankie?
    GC: She’s super special. I met her through a job. I was doing a photoshoot, and she was the subject. We had to spend two days together, and it was kind of an instant connection. We just got each other’s weirdness. We didn’t have to communicate with language; it felt kind of telepathic in a way. I knew when I saw her that the character had come alive, and then I couldn’t imagine anyone else but her. She did exactly that for me.

    MF: How did you get real influencers to participate in the film?
    GC: It was really fun to get to meet all these influencers and learn from them, about their experiences and their connection with their own fan base. They’re very sweet and intelligent and talented people. With that round table, it was figuring out different types of YouTubers or social influencers who have very different content.

    MF: Can you talk about the way you shot the film?.
    GC: [Cinematographer] Autumn Durald is one of my best friends, and she shot ‘Palo Alto,’ and I just trust her wholeheartedly. I try to focus on the narrative. Every once in a while I’ll have some input because I love photography, but I just trust her wholeheartedly to do what she wants to do and what she feels is right. We talked a little bit about how I wanted to incorporate this aesthetic of raw, candid, kind of janky ugliness in contrast to the more cinematic, beautiful, traditional way of telling a story.

    MF: The use of emojis was really interesting.
    GC: I always knew I wanted to add graphics and I felt like the way I’d seen it represented in most films didn’t feel the way I wanted to see it or that I felt like I related to it. I wanted to find a way to express emotionally what’s going on in a scene and embellish it in that way. It always stemmed from me feeling there was an overabundance of content, just in our life, and how do you escape it? Just that feeling of being inundated and bloated. I wanted to kind of emoji-vomit it out.

    MF: Can you recommend another film directed by a woman for our readers to seek out?
    GC: I’m really excited to see ‘Zola’, but I haven’t seen it yet. I know that team of people are really intelligent and have great taste and that story is super interesting. So I’m excited for that.

    MF: Have you seen Janicza Bravo’s previous film ‘Lemon’?
    GC: I have not, but I’ve gotten to know her a little bit through the process of having films come out during the pandemic. I admire her a lot, and I’m excited to see more of her work. I think her social media is hilarious.

    Lemon (directed by Janicza Bravo)

    Janicza Bravo (left) on the set of Lemon. (Photo courtesy Magnolia Pictures)
    Janicza Bravo (left) on the set of Lemon. (Photo courtesy Magnolia Pictures)

    Born in 1981 in New York City, Janicza Bravo spent much of her childhood living between the United States and Panama. She studied costume and set design for theater, as well as acting at NYU. She worked as a stylist before turning to filmmaking. She honed her unique cinematic voice directing seven short films, including the Sundance stand-out ‘Gregory Go Boom’ starring Michael Cera. She broke into the mainstream with the searing “Juneteenth” episode of Donald Glover’s hit television show ‘Atlanta’ in 2016. In 2017, she directed her first feature film ‘Lemon,’ starring her then-husband Brett Gelman. Premiering at the SXSW film festival, ‘Lemon’ follows a miserable middle-aged man named Isaac (Gelman) who is just never quite able to do the right thing. Although the film received mixed reviews after its release, Bravo’s distinctly absurd cringe humor was praised. Her next feature film is ‘Zola,’ is based on the viral Twitter thread. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2020 and will be released this June.

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  • The 16 Craziest Things That Happened During the Filming of ‘Apocalypse Now’

    The 16 Craziest Things That Happened During the Filming of ‘Apocalypse Now’

    United Artists

    Now back in theaters for its 40th anniversary “Apocalypse Now,” is both one of Francis Ford Coppola‘s most celebrated films and one of the most notoriously troubled productions in history.

    It was released on August 19, 1979, more than three years after Coppola began shooting. What went wrong?

    As Coppola said at Cannes, making the film was just like the U.S in Vietnam. “We were in the jungle, there were too many of us, we had access to too much money, too much equipment, and little by little we went insane.”

    Here’s some of what went down in the Philippine jungle:

    1. Original star Harvey Keitel was fired after six weeks

    Warner Bros.

    Coppola hired Harvey Keitel based on his work in Martin Scorsese’s “Mean Streets.” After he watched the first week’s footage, Coppola decided to fire him, yielding the first dramatic headlines of the production: “Coppola loses his beard, 38 lbs and Star Keitel.’ He was replaced by Martin Sheen. The only footage of Keitel that made it into the film is a shot of him from the back on the boat.

    2. Martin Sheen was really drunk, and really bleeding, during his Saigon Hotel scene

    In this excerpt from Eleanor Coppola‘s Emmy-winning documentary “Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse,” Sheen recalls shooting the scene where Willard smashes a mirror in his hotel room: “ I was so drunk, I couldn’t stand up, frankly. I was so intoxicated, I didn’t realize how close to the mirror I was.” Despite bleeding profusely, Sheen insisted on continuing filming.  Eleanor adds that Marty was so unpredictable at that point, she thought he might lunge at the camera or attack Francis,.

    3. Sheen had a heart attack and received the last rites

    Paramount

    You’ve surely heard Sheen had a heart attack during production. What you might know is that he crawled out of his room at 2 a.m. and a quarter of a mile down the local highway before finding help. “He had suffered a serious heart attack and even received last rites from a priest who did not speak English,” Eleanor Coppola says in “Hearts of Darkness.” He took six weeks off and, not wanting to halt the already over-budget production, said that he had suffered from heat stroke.

    4. Coppola didn’t want word of Sheen’s heart attack to get out

    In “Hearts of Darkness, co-producer Tom Sternberg recalls he got a phone call from his secretary, who said “Marty’s had a heart attack and Francis doesn’t want to admit it.” Coppola is later heard on tape saying, “If Marty dies, I want to hear everything is okay, until I say, ‘Marty is dead.’”

    5. Coppola mortgaged his house to finish the film

    Paramount

    Coppola had financed the movie himself, thanks to his success with the “Godfather” films, but had already blown the $13 budget. To finish the movie, he mortgaged his considerable estate to secure additional money from United Artists. If the film hadn’t earned at least $40 million, he would have lost it all. (“Apocalypse Now” went on to earn more than $78 million during its initial release, as well as 2 Oscars, and shared top prize at the Cannes Film Fest.)

    7. Filming took place in the middle of a real war

    Paramount

    Coppola made a deal with Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos to lease his helicopters — if they weren’t needed in actual fighting. (The U.S. military refused to participate in a film about the Vietnam war).  Because of the Civil War in the south, every day the Philippine government sent different pilots, who hadn’t participated in the rehearsals. Even worse,  in the middle of a complicated shot, the helicopters would often be called away to fight the rebels in the nearby hills.

    8. A typhoon destroyed several sets

    In May 1976, the Philippines was hit by a typhoon that killed 374 people and destroyed many of the movie’s sets, including the Playboy Bunny set. The production closed down for 2 months to rebuild.

    9. Coppola insisted on serving up a real French feast during the French Plantation scene

    Miramax

    Before filming the French Plantation scene (which was cut for theatrical release but added back for “Apocalypse Now: Redux“), Coppola insisted that the white wine  be served ice cold and red wine should be served at 58 degrees. “I want the French to say, ‘My God, how did they do that?,’” he says in “Hearts of Darkness.” He made the decision to cut the entire sequence right after shooting it.

    10. Marlon Brando demanded a $1 million down payment — then almost didn’t show

    United Artists

    After Al Pacino turned down the part, another “Godfather” star, Marlon Brando, agreed to play Willard’s target, the mysterious Col. Kurtz. He was supposed to lose weight for the role and read the novel “Heart of Darkness” that inspired the movie. He did neither. Instead he turned up 88 lbs overweight and completely unprepared. At one point, he threatened to take Coppola’s initial $1 million without ever setting foot on set.

    (A Brando biographer disputes that the actor was unprepared and says that not only did the two communicate extensively about the character beforehand, Coppola was simply looking for a scapegoat at that point in filming.)

    11. Brando spent his first days on set improvising his character

    Paramount

    According to “Hearts of Darkness,” Coppola spent several days of the actor’s precious time in improvisation before shooting a single scene. He figured that getting Brando to start improvising (which he did throughout his scenes) was better than trying to get him to memorize a script. (On the “The Godfather,” cue cards were pasted all over the set because Brando often forget his lines.)

    12. Real people played the severed heads — through 38 takes

    Paramount

    The people who were playing the severed heads sat in their boxes in the ground from 8 in the morning until 6 at night: Coppola did 38 takes. Between takes, they were covered with umbrellas to shield them from the hot sun.

    13. People were really doing drugs on set

    United Artists

    Sam Bottoms, who plays surfing soldier Lance, admitted he dropped acid during filming, but not during the Do Long Bridge sequence where his character is tripping. “I was doing speed then. We were working lots of nights and I wanted a speedy sort of edge. We were bad, we were just bad boys,” he says in “Hearts of Darkness.”

    14. Dennis Hopper and Marlon Brando hated each other

    United Artists

    Dennis Hopper, who admits in “Hearts of Darkness” that his career was at a low point and he was happy to go anywhere and make any movie at the time, was only cast 2 weeks before his scenes. Coppola was afraid to put “crazy” Hopper with Marlon Brando in a scene and he was right: The two hated each other. They had to shoot their shared scenes in separate shots. When Kurtz throws the book at Hopper’s character and calls him a “mutt,” that was probably one of Brando’s many improvisations.

    15. Coppola contemplated suicide or injury to get out of finishing the film

    Paramount

    As he says at one point in “Hearts of Darkness,” “I’m going to be bankrupt anyway. I’m thinking of shooting myself.” He was so desperate to get off the film, he contemplated what kind of sicknesses he could get or how he could maybe injure himself by falling off a platform, so he could have “a graceful way out.”

    16. Coppola convinced John Milius the film was going to win a Nobel Prize

    John Milius, who wrote the original script, recalls that he was called in to put the script back together after Coppola’s extensive revisions.  He was told by the frustrated crew to talk some sense into Coppola. Instead, Francis had him convinced this was the first film that would win the Nobel Prize.

  • 17 Things You Never Knew About ‘Apocalypse Now’ on its 40th Anniversary

    17 Things You Never Knew About ‘Apocalypse Now’ on its 40th Anniversary

    United Artists

    It’s now been 40 years since Francis Ford Coppola gave us one of the greatest and most mind-bending war movies of all time. “Apocalypse Now” has lost none of its power over the decades. So strap on your helmet and head up-river to learn some interesting trivia about the background and infamously troubled production of “Apocalypse Now.”

    1. Writer John Milius listened exclusively to music by The Doors and Richard Wagner while he worked on the screenplay. Milius said he believed The Doors to be “the music of war,” a fact which greatly upset the members of the band.

    2. The majority of the dialogue had to be re-recorded during post-production, as the jungle environments and heavy background noise made much of the original dialogue impossible to use.

    3. Coppola originally offered the role of Captain Willard to “The Godfather” star Al Pacino. Pacino declined, telling Coppola he had no interest in spending months shooting in a swamp.

    Paramount Pictures

    4. Pacino was also one of several actors Coppola considered as a potential replacement for Marlon Brando, who repeatedly threatened to quit.

    5. Harvey Keitel was originally cast as Willard and was fired after two weeks of filming. At least one shot of Keitel’s Willard made it into the final version of the film.

    6. Martin Sheen largely improvised the scene where Willard has a meltdown in his hotel room. Sheen was heavily intoxicated and actually cut his hand when he punched the mirror.

    United Artists

    7. Sheen’s brother Joe Estevez plays an essential but uncredited role in the movie. Estevez served as a stand-in for his brother while Sheen was recuperating from a heart attack, and also provided the voice-over work for a large portion of Captain Willard’s narration.

    8. Coppola opted to frame Colonel Kurtz in shadow for most of his scenes, mainly to hide the fact that Brando arrived on-set extremely overweight.

    United Artists

    9. The friction between Brando and Coppola became so great that Assistant Director Jerry Ziesmer eventually took over filming for Brando’s scenes.

    10. Harrison Ford specifically chose his character’s name, “G. Lucas,” in tribute to “Star Wars” and “American Graffiti” director George Lucas. Lucas was once slated to direct “Apocalypse Now” himself, which he envisioned as a faux-documentary.

    11. The film’s famously disaster-ridden production is chronicled in the 1991 documentary “Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse.” The production went so far over budget that Coppola was forced to mortgage his house and winery in order to finish filming.

    Triton Pictures

    12. Widespread drug abuse was another major problem during filming. Dennis Hopper reportedly caused a teenage Laurence Fishburne to become addicted to heroin.

    13. Because the film includes no opening title card or credits, Coppola needed to include the shot of the graffiti tag “Our Motto: Apocalypse Now” in order to ensure the film could be copyrighted.

    United Artists

    14. The American Humane Association slammed the film with an “Unacceptable” rating after it was discovered the scene where the water buffalo is slaughtered was actually real.

    15. Coppola repeatedly struggled with his vision for the ending of the movie. Originally, the screenplay ended with Kurtz convincing Willard to join him and both men dying in a military airstrike, but Coppola opted for a less depressing finale.

    United Artists

    16. There are several alternate versions of the film in existence. 2001’s “Apocalypse Now Redux” adds 49 minutes of deleted footage, including the lengthy sequence where Willard and his crew encounter the French plantation owners. A bootleg workprint cut includes even more deleted footage, such as a death scene for Hopper’s character.

    17. 2019 will see the release of “Apocalypse Now: The Final Cut,” a 4K restoration that cuts roughly 20 minutes of footage that was added to “Redux.”

  • Francis Ford Coppola Finally Making ‘Megalopolis’ This Year

    Francis Ford Coppola Finally Making ‘Megalopolis’ This Year

    Sony Pictures Classic

    Just days from his 80th birthday, Francis Ford Coppola is finally preparing to direct “Megalopolis,” a passion project that has been in the works for over a decade.

    According toDeadline, the legendary “Godfather” director will move forward this year with making the sprawling sci-fi epic, which he wrote in the early 1980s. But the film, which follows New York City in the aftermath of a major disaster, was put on hold after the September 11 attacks.

    “So yes, I plan this year to begin my longstanding ambition to make a major work utilizing all I have learned during my long career, beginning at age 16 doing theater, and that will be an epic on a grand scale, which I’ve entitled ‘Megalopolis,’” Coppola said.

    “It is unusual; it will be a production on a grand scale with a large cast. It makes use of all of my years of trying films in different styles and types culminating in what I think is my own voice and aspiration. It is not within the mainstream of what is produced now, but I am intending and wishing and in fact encouraged, to begin production this year.”

    Coppola is reportedly already eyeing actors for “Megalopolis,” including Jude Law for the lead role. Many actors have been attached to the project over the years, including Robert De Niro, Warren Beatty, and Russell Crowe.

    This would be Coppola’s first feature directing job since 2011’s “Twist.”

    The director also has a new cut of his seminal work “Apocalypse Now” which will debut at the Tribeca Film Festival this month.

  • A Last Minute Appreciation of Michael Jackson’s ‘Captain EO’ Before the HBO Documentary Ruins It Forever

    A Last Minute Appreciation of Michael Jackson’s ‘Captain EO’ Before the HBO Documentary Ruins It Forever

    Disney

    This weekend the two-part Michael Jackson documentary “Leaving Neverland” airs on HBO (it starts on Sunday and concludes on Monday) and if the reaction out of Sundance is any indication of what we can expect from the controversial documentary, well, come Tuesday it’s probably going to be very difficult to listen to any Michael Jackson song again. Or watch any of his music video or movie projects, either. Which is why we’d like to take the time to appreciate “Captain EO,” his 3D marvel for the Disney Parks, while we still can.

    First, a bit of background: “Captain EO” was part of an initiative by newly-instated Disney CEO Michael Eisner to make Disneyland and Walt Disney World hipper and more appealing to kids. Considering Disney’s live-action film output had, since Walt’s death in 1966, not exactly been stellar, he turned to George Lucas to assist in this endeavor. Together, they came up with Star Tours and “Captain EO,” a “4D” film directed by Francis Ford Coppola (who needed a big commercial moment after a string of disappointments) and starring Michael Jackson. Jackson had been in Disney’s orbit for a while at this point and was well known for visiting Disneyland and Walt Disney World frequently. Also, he almost starred in a “Mary Poppins” sequel (yes, really). But that’s a story for another time.

    The storyline for “Captain EO,” about a ragtag group of space adventurers who bring peace (through music, of course) to a cold and hostile world, was one of several ideas Walt Disney Imagineers brought to Jackson. Another was a kind of updated version of “Thriller,” with Jackson traveling around the park and bringing various characters to life. (They even spoke with “Thriller” director John Landis about the project.) Finally, the “Captain EO” concept was decided upon, since it combined a different storyline that featured a “Peter Pan”-like set-up (which Jackson loved) and the movie’s futuristic theme park setting of Tomorrowland (in Disneyland) and Futureworld (in EPCOT Center at Walt Disney World). Coppola chose the title “Captain EO,” naming after Eos, the Greek goddess of dawn.

    Production was notoriously problematic, with Coppola and cinematographer Vittorio Storaro struggling with the cumbersome 3D cameras and visual effects and Lucas, who was thought to be a more hands-on producer thanks to his extensive knowledge of this type of production, taking a backseat role. As comedian Doug Benson, who served as a back-up dancer on the film, recalled on the podcast “I Was There Too,” at some point the production ran out of money completely, with trained professionals replaced by cheap extras. The final budget for the 17-minute extravaganza was a whopping $23.7 million, at the time the most expensive per-minute movie ever made (that stat would be eclipsed, a few years later, by James Cameron and his theme park attraction “T2 3D: Battle Across Time”). A popular rumor from the production’s extensive reshoots had the team replacing the head of robot character Minor Domo with a toilet’s ballcock because they couldn’t locate the original prop. Disney brass was apparently troubled by the amount of hip thrusts and crotch grabs, which is why there are moments during the movie that seem extra grainy; it’s because they had to be zoomed in to avoid the offending area. (Some thrusts still made it in.)

    When the movie premiered at Walt Disney World and Disneyland in 1986, more than a year after it was supposed to (they had to shove essentially a “proof of concept” film called Magic Journeys into the theaters specifically built for “Captain EO” after the delay), it was met with the full-court Disney marketing blitz, including an hour-long making-of television special (hosted by Whoopi Goldberg, who called the film “a 17-minute miracle of a movie”) and another hour-long grand opening celebration from Disneyland that featured some truly incredible of-the-moment celebrities Valerie Harper, Debra Winger and, um, OJ Simpson. The special was hosted by Patrick Duffy and Justine Bateman with performances by The Moody Blues, Robert Palmer and Starship (they performed on the Tomorrowland stage!) That grand opening celebration is also notable for a weird children’s choir version of Jackson’s “We Are Here to Change the World,” a song written for “Captain EO” and not officially released until a 2004 box set (and even that was a truncated version).

    As for the attraction itself, it opened on the same week in Florida and California in September 1986, a coordinated effort that seems downright incredible, even for the modern-day Disney machine, and came festooned with dazzling in-theater effects that earned its “4D” moniker.

    Disney

    And honestly, “Captain EO” was an expertly choreographed thrill ride. The story is pretty basic, with Jackson and his ragtag band of misfits crashing on a planet full of designs liberally borrowed from H.R. Giger (Anjelica Huston’s Supreme Leader make-up is particularly egregious), but the song-and-dance numbers are literally out-of-this-world and the movie’s message of peace and hope in technologically troubled times resonated at both theme parks. Putting on those plastic purple shades and walking into that theater, you felt like you really were being transported along on some intergalactic voyage. Disney allowed for a television broadcast of the movie once; it aired on MTV in the promotional lead-up to Jackson’s “HIStory” album release. It was just as amazing at home.

    Of course, all good things come to an end, and after the child molestation charges were first leveled against Jackson in 1993, it quietly closed in EPCOT the following year (and remained open in Tokyo Disneyland until 1996, Disneyland until 1997 and in Disneyland Paris until 1998). Associating a potential pedophile (even if he was never convicted) with the Disney brand was just too much. Of course, after Jackson’s untimely death, Disney started screening the film for members of Jackson’s family and friends and the decision was reached that the attraction would return for a limited time under the title “Captain EO Tribute” (this undoubtedly had to do with some legal reasons). And while the theater had gone through some changes and many of the effects didn’t return (more were back in California than Florida), it was still a blast to see Captain EO liberate a gloomy planet through the power of 1980s pop. This resurrected EO was a surprise smash, playing to packed houses and selling tons of merchandise. This iteration of “Captain EO” ended up running for 5 years in most parks, which is truly incredible.

    Now, it seems like the time to sunset both our warm feelings of the attraction and a healthy appreciation of Michael Jackson in general. We haven’t seen the two-part documentary yet but early reports say that it is scathing and really compelling and will fundamentally alter your view of the artist forever. It’s a shame, but knowledge is power. Captain EO himself would probably agree.